Gnocchi With Brown Butter and Sage

  4.2 – 24 reviews  • Gnocchi
Level: Easy
Total: 1 hr 50 min
Prep: 1 hr
Cook: 50 min
Yield: 4 to 6 servings

Ingredients

  1. Kosher salt
  2. 3 large russet potatoes (1 1/2 to 1 3/4 pounds)
  3. 1 to 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  4. 1 large egg
  5. 6 tablespoons salted butter
  6. 1 tablespoon red pepper flakes
  7. 4 sage leaves, thinly sliced
  8. 1/2 cup shaved and/or coarsely grated parmesan cheese

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Pour a mound of kosher salt onto a rimmed baking sheet. Prick the potatoes all over with a fork and nestle them in the salt; this prevents the potatoes from browning and draws out their moisture. Bake the potatoes until fork-tender, about 45 minutes. Let sit until just cool enough to handle.
  2. Halve the potatoes lengthwise and scoop the flesh into a potato ricer; discard the skin. Press the flesh through the ricer onto a floured counter or cutting board; let cool 3 to 4 minutes.
  3. Spread out the potatoes slightly. Beat the egg with 1/2 teaspoon salt in a small bowl and drizzle over the potatoes.
  4. Sprinkle the potato mixture with 1 cup flour and knead until a smooth dough forms, adding up to 1/2 cup more flour if the dough is sticky. Cover with a kitchen towel and let rest 10 minutes.
  5. Lightly flour your surface. Divide the dough into 6 pieces and roll into “snakes,” about 1/2 inch in diameter. Cut into 1/2-to-1-inch lengths with a bench cutter or knife; transfer to a parchment-lined baking sheet and lightly dust with flour.
  6. Make the sauce: Melt the butter in a large skillet over high heat. Cook, stirring, until the butter develops brown flecks and smells nutty. Watch it closely to keep the butter solids from burning. Remove from the heat.
  7. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the gnocchi; wait until they float to the surface, then simmer 30 more seconds. (Taste one to make sure it’s cooked through.) Return the brown butter to medium-low heat. Scoop the gnocchi from the pot with a spider or slotted spoon, transfer to the skillet and toss until some of the brown-butter flecks stick to the gnocchi. Add the red pepper flakes, sage and a few tablespoons of the gnocchi cooking water; toss again. Remove from the heat and add half of the cheese. Divide among bowls and top with the remaining cheese.

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 6 servings
Calories 333
Total Fat 16 g
Saturated Fat 10 g
Carbohydrates 38 g
Dietary Fiber 2 g
Sugar 1 g
Protein 10 g
Cholesterol 70 mg
Sodium 430 mg

Reviews

Elizabeth Williams
Amazingly easy to follow recipe with such a WOW factor for a Friday dinner. A great way to use sage from my garden. Thank you! 

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Michael Kemp
Delicious and so simple and easy.  I am gluten free and to save time, I used Capello’s frozen gnocchi made with almond flour and it was fantastic.  I’d add a little more sage and be sure to season it well.  Will definitely make again.  Yum!
Caitlin Chavez
I had a great gnocchi and pesto at a restaurant recently and wanted to recreate the dish so I used this recipe for the gnocchi only. Making the homemade gnocchi was so easy and worth the minimal effort. It was perfect! And I had a ton left over which I froze for future use. I’ll definitely make again and look forward to trying the brown butter and sage sauce. 
Eric Flores
Made this gnocchi recipe but paired it with a spinach alfredo sauce instead (the brown butter sage sauce sounds nutty and tasty, will definitely try next time). Also, instead of baking potatoes in a pan of salt, I placed the potatoes directly on my oven racks to get a dry bake–worked great. 

First time making gnocchi, and it was delicious! I cut half the gnocchi a little larger (1-inch pieces), and they came out slightly chewy and yummy. I cut the other half smaller (half-inch pieces), and they were pillowy, light, and scrumptious as well. Tasted very similar to the gnocchi I recently had in Rome–highly recommend!
Holly Clark
A little spicy for my taste so I would go easy on the red pepper next time. But the gnocchi were so good, delicious little pillows of goodness. And I am so impressed with myself! I don’t have a ricer and couldn’t find one so I used a fork and they still turned out great!
Kevin James
This is my first time making gnocchi and after reading many different recipes and reviews, I decided on this one. I baked 2 rather large potatoes and riced them. I added 1 cup of flour and 3 tbsp of beaten egg to 1 potato and a quarter of another. I added more potato as needed to get what I thought would be the right consistency. I cut a few and boiled a small pot of water to test them before cooking them all to see if they would fall apart or survive. They came out wonderful so I was able to move forward with the remainder of the ingredients. All in all, 2 large potatoes (about 1.5 lbs), 3/4 of the beaten egg and maybe 1 1/4 cups of flour was used.
Debbie Dixon
Used this recipe only for the sauce, using prepared gnocchi. The sauce was easy to prepare but definitely too much pepper flakes. I like food spicy but this was excessive. Made again without the pepper flakes and it was much better.
Ashley Henderson
So awesome! I just finished making it – I made a different brown butter sauce, but the recipe is easy to follow and it makes a LOT of gnocchi. I rolled out several snakes and put them in freezer bags so I can use them in the next month or so.
Barry Graham
My go-to recipe for simple elegance. Che Bella! How beautiful is that?
Patricia West
My first time making Gnocchi from scratch, I found this recipe was clear/easy to follow and worked well! I did however bake my potatoes in the micro wave to SAVE TIME and micro works extremely well. You will not be sacrificing quality if you micro the ‘taters. I cooked them until a tooth pic was easily inserted, then I peeled & riced them. Although this recipe is perfectly fine the way it is, just for variety next time I may experiment with adding some ‘nutmeg’ to the dough and perhaps some ‘lemon zest’ both of which I’ve seen added in other versions of Sage Brown Butter Gnocchi.

 

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